No Relaxing Around These Hair Products

May 18, 2000 -- Soft and Beautiful, Dark and Lovely: The names of these
products suggest a romantic rendezvous on a moonlit night.

But for children who get into these hair relaxers, the rendezvous can take
place in an emergency room, and there's nothing romantic about it. These
products, and many other hair relaxers like them, contain what are known as
"alkaline caustics." These substances can cause a chemical burn similar
to what might happen when a person comes into contact with a strong acid.

Yet, in a chemical sense, they are completely different. Acids and alkalines
lie on opposite sides of the 14-point pH scale. The lower you go on the scale,
the stronger the acid. The higher you go, the stronger the alkaline. Substances
that land in the middle have a pH close to what's normally found in the
body.

Hair relaxers have pHs in the 11 to 13 range, and, as a recent report in the
journal Pediatrics notes, they commonly cause burns when accidentally
eaten or smeared on the skin. The report's author, Daniel A. Rauch, MD, is
calling on pediatricians to inform parents about the potential dangers of these
products after he treated four children injured by them -- one of them
seriously. Rauch is with the department of pediatrics and Jacobi Medical
Center/Albert Einsten College of Medicine in the Bronx, N.Y.

"The most important thing is, he's highlighting that these are extremely
caustic chemicals, and because of the way they're promoted -- as containing 'no
lye' -- people may not think they are dangerous products," says Rosanne
Soloway of the American Association of Poison Control Centers in
Washington.

But they certainly can be, says Harold Simmons, R&D chemist at Bronner
Brothers in Atlanta, a leading manufacturer of hair relaxers. "As with any
chemical you use, you really don't want kids in the same room ... because all
it takes is just a second."

Simmons says there's just a small difference in pH between "lye" and
"no lye" relaxers. The latter contain ingredients such as calcium
hydroxide, he says, and must be activated by adding a solution. Burns from
these products might take a little more time to develop, but they will. Lye
relaxers, on the other hand, contain sodium hydroxide and act more quickly.